Subscription-enabled news recommendation system

ABSTRACT

A framework for an automated news recommendation system for financial analysis. The system includes the automated ingestion, relevancy, clustering, and ranking of news events for financial analysts in the capital markets. The framework is adaptable to any form of input news data and can seamlessly integrate with other data used for analysis like financial data.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION 1. Field

The present disclosure relates generally to an improved computer system and, in particular, to a news recommendation system for financial analysis.

2. Background

Analysts in the financial services industry ingest news from dozens of sources every day. It is critical for them to stay up-to-date on the latest events as at any moment, key material events could occur that impact their analysis on a given company. For example, a company could announce an acquisition or a disruption to their supply chain that would materially impact its business operations. By staying informed on these events in a timely manner, analysts can promptly respond to these changing circumstances and potentially minimize any impact of the company's action on their investment holdings or analysis.

Currently, for each company they analyze, the analysts manually set up news alert subscriptions from a fixed set of sources based on keywords of the company's name. Thus, the news alerts analysts receive contain much noise. Also, a company with a name like “Fruit” could result in news alerts about fruit orchards or fruit juice. Or alternatively, if there are critical articles discussing changes in regulations of the smartphone industry but there are no explicit mentions of company names, this may not be picked up through the keyword-generated manual news alert. The lack of comprehensive coverage means the attention to certain critical news events can be delayed or missed altogether. Additionally, when a breaking news event occurs, dozens of media outlets report on the same occurrence which result in multiple alerts on the same event. Manual review of relevant and important news events is time-consuming and error-prone.

Currently, analysts receive news alerts through manually created news alert subscriptions that are often noisy and difficult to manage. The manual review process is time-consuming and error-prone. Therefore, many analysts rely on a news recommendation system for financial analysis, which can suggest important news articles that are relevant to financial analysts' tasks.

Early news recommendation systems used external ontologies to find interesting news articles. However, related knowledge bases do not always exist and are highly expensive to build. In the recent years, many news recommendation systems used collaborative filtering (CF) based methods, which performed effectively in movie and product recommendations, and also proposed CF-based news recommendation systems.

CF-based news recommendation systems capture user preference by user behavior, such as click, like, and repost. However, CF-based methods are not feasible in task-oriented news recommendation systems, especially in the finance industry. Recommending news similar to the ones in analysts' history may bias the system towards frequent events. However, financially interesting business events may be rare, such as bankruptcy and acquisition. In this case, once occurred, rare events have minimal chances to be surfaced.

Furthermore, in financial firms, one analyst is assigned to monitor a given company or several analysts may analyze different aspects of a company. In this case, diverse “user interests” generate highly sparse user-news interaction, which discounts the performance of the CF-based system.

Content-based recommendation system is another commonly used technique. In the application of a news recommendation system, most content-based methods build user profiles based on past reading history and calculate the similarity between an incoming news and each user profile. Similar to the CF-based methods, in task-oriented news recommendation systems, determining news relevancy based on the history of individual users may favor frequent business events than important but rare events.

Popularity-based recommendation systems monitor news popularity from social media such as Twitter. However, a task-oriented news system should not be impacted by the popularity on social media, since there is little correlation between these trending news stories and task-relevant business events.

Therefore, it would be desirable to have a method and apparatus that take into account at least some of the issues discussed above, as well as other possible issues. For example, it is desirable to build a news recommendation system for financial analysis, which can suggest important news articles that are relevant to financial analysts' tasks. To be applied in large financial companies, a desirable news recommendation system should be 1) effective so that analysts will not miss any important information, 2) efficient so that news can be timely updated, 3) scalable so that it can be used in large business environments, and 4) extendable so that changing business requirements can easily be met.

SUMMARY

The illustrative embodiments described herein provide a framework for an automated news recommendation system for financial analysis. The system includes the automated ingestion, relevancy, clustering, and ranking of news events for financial analysts in the capital markets. The framework is adaptable to any form of input news data and can seamlessly integrate with other data used for analysis like financial data.

The illustrative embodiments described herein provide a methodology that uses a combination of entity-based news tracking, clustering, relevancy, and ranking models to detect news events, filter out noise, cluster the same event into each of the respective clusters, assign relevance of news event to main entity, and rank each news event cluster based on the importance of the event to the overall company. The ranked list of events are presented to the user in this curated manner which allows analysts to focus on key news relevant to their analysis and thus spend less time filtering through noise and reviewing redundant events. New business requirements can be easily added by defining new subscriptions with any customized entities. Processes within subscriptions can be fully paralleled.

The illustrative embodiments described herein provide (1) a full-stack systematic methodology of information retrieval and relevancy to automatically distinguish financially material news events, and (2) a generic, scalable, and extendable news recommendation framework that can be easily adopted by most financial companies. The news recommendation system of the illustrative embodiments is able to detect emerging risks to company's operations faster and more efficiently than current analysis methods.

The illustrative embodiments described herein provide a news recommendation system that offers several advantages over prior art systems that allow financial analysts to work more effectively and efficiently. The news recommendation system described herein presents a full stack financial news recommendation system from data storage to user interface that can be easily deployed at any financial company. With a subscription-based pipeline, the system can be conveniently parallelized and extended for new business monitoring requirements. By using a series of clustering and relevancy models, the system is able to recommend news events that have a direct relevancy to the final outcome of analysis, e.g., credit rating, at a financial firm.

The features and functions can be achieved independently in various embodiments of the present disclosure or may be combined in yet other embodiments in which further details can be seen with reference to the following description and drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The novel features believed characteristic of the illustrative embodiments are set forth in the appended claims. The illustrative embodiments, however, as well as a preferred mode of use, further objectives and features thereof, will best be understood by reference to the following detailed description of an illustrative embodiment of the present disclosure when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:

FIG. 1 is a pictorial representation of a network of data processing systems in which illustrative embodiments may be implemented;

FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a news recommendation environment in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 3 is an architecture of a news recommendation system in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 4 is an illustration of a structure of a neural network model for computing a lower dimensional representation of a data news article in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 5 is a graphical user interface of a news recommendation system in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 6 is a flowchart illustrating a process for identifying and recommending relevant news articles in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 7 is a flowchart illustrating a process for providing news recommendations in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 8 is a flowchart illustrating a process for ingesting news articles from a plurality of news sources in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 9 is a flowchart illustrating a process for classifying news articles into one or more subscriptions depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 10 is a flowchart illustrating a process for removing duplicate news articles in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 11 is a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 12 is a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles based on entity relevance in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 13 is a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles based on a news source in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 14 is a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles based on topic relevance in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 15 is a flowchart illustrating a process for clustering news articles according to content in accordance with illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 16 is a flowchart illustrating a process for iteratively clustering news articles in chronological order in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 17 is a flowchart illustrating a process for clustering news articles according to content in accordance with an illustrative embodiment;

FIG. 18 is a flowchart illustrating a process for clustering news articles according to content in accordance with illustrative embodiments; and

FIG. 19 is an illustration of a block diagram of a data processing system in accordance with an illustrative embodiment.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The illustrative embodiments recognize and take into account one or more different considerations. For example, the illustrative embodiments recognize and take into account that it is desirable to build a news recommendation system for financial analysis, which can suggest important news articles that are relevant to financial analysts' tasks.

The illustrative embodiments recognize and take into account that identifying the relevance of the news event to the analytical assessment of a company is a complex process that is often noisy and difficult to manage. For example, certain topics like a management turnover could be breaking news but may not be impactful to the company's rating and thus not highly relevant for analysts. Additionally, for example, if company A engages in an activity in partnership with company B, if the activity were to primarily impact company A and only tangentially impact company B, the news event would not be as relevant for analysts covering company B.

The illustrative embodiments recognize and take into account that material news events should impact the future performance of the company in a sustained and meaningful way. For example, the credit rating of a company is a one to two year forward-looking assessment of the company's performance. This nuanced definition of a credit rating impacts the approach required to assess the relevance of the news events to the end user.

The illustrative embodiments further recognize and take into account that a news recommendation system should be 1) effective so that analysts will not miss any important information, 2) efficient so that news can be timely updated, 3) scalable so that it can be used in large business environments, and 4) extendable so that changing business requirements can easily be met.

The illustrative embodiments described herein provide a framework for an automated news recommendation system for financial analysis. The system includes the automated ingestion, relevancy, clustering, and ranking of news events for financial analysts in the capital markets. The framework is adaptable to any form of input news data and can seamlessly integrate with other data used for analysis like financial data.

The illustrative embodiments provide a methodology that uses a combination of entity-based news tracking, clustering, relevancy, and ranking models to detect news events, filter out noise, cluster the same event into each of the respective clusters, assign relevance of news events to a main entity, and rank each news event cluster based on the importance of the event to the overall company. The ranked list of events are presented to the user in this curated manner which allows analysts to focus on key news relevant to their analysis and thus spend less time filtering through noise and reviewing redundant events. New business requirements can be easily added by defining new subscriptions with any customized entities. Processes within subscriptions can be fully paralleled.

The illustrative embodiments provide (1) a full-stack systematic methodology of information retrieval and relevancy to automatically distinguish financially material news events, and (2) a generic, scalable, and extendable news recommendation framework that can be easily adopted by most financial companies. The news recommendation system of the illustrative embodiments is able to detect emerging risks to a company's operations faster and more efficiently than current analyst methods.

With reference now to the figures and, in particular, with reference to FIG. 1, a pictorial representation of a network of data processing systems is depicted in which illustrative embodiments may be implemented. Network data processing system 100 is a network of computers in which the illustrative embodiments may be implemented. Network data processing system 100 contains network 102, which is the medium used to provide communications links between various devices and computers connected together within network data processing system 100. Network 102 may include connections, such as wire, wireless communication links, or fiber optic cables.

In the depicted example, server computer 104 and server computer 106 connect to network 102 along with storage unit 108. In addition, client devices 110 connect to network 102. As depicted, client devices 110 include client computer 112, client computer 114, and client computer 116. Client devices 110 can be, for example, computers, workstations, or network computers. In the depicted example, server computer 104 provides information, such as boot files, operating system images, and applications to client devices 110. Further, client devices 110 can also include other types of client devices such as a mobile phone, a tablet computer, and smart glasses. In this illustrative example, server computer 104, server computer 106, storage unit 108, and client devices 110 are network devices that connect to network 102 in which network 102 is the communications media for these network devices. Some or all of client devices 110 may form an Internet-of-things (IoT) in which these physical devices can connect to network 102 and exchange information with each other over network 102.

Client devices 110 are clients to server computer 104 in this example. Network data processing system 100 may include additional server computers, client computers, and other devices not shown. Client devices 110 connect to network 102 utilizing at least one of wired, optical fiber, or wireless connections.

Program code located in network data processing system 100 can be stored on a computer-recordable storage medium and downloaded to a data processing system or other device for use. For example, program code can be stored on a computer-recordable storage medium on server computer 104 and downloaded to client devices 110 over network 102 for use on client devices 110.

In the depicted example, network data processing system 100 is the Internet with network 102 representing a worldwide collection of networks and gateways that use the Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) suite of protocols to communicate with one another. At the heart of the Internet is a backbone of high-speed data communication lines between major nodes or host computers consisting of thousands of commercial, governmental, educational, and other computer systems that route data and messages. Of course, network data processing system 100 also may be implemented using a number of different types of networks. For example, network 102 can be comprised of at least one of the Internet, an intranet, a local area network (LAN), a metropolitan area network (MAN), or a wide area network (WAN). FIG. 1 is intended as an example, and not as an architectural limitation for the different illustrative embodiments.

As used herein, “a number of,” when used with reference to items, means one or more items. For example, “a number of different types of networks” is one or more different types of networks.

Further, the phrase “at least one of,” when used with a list of items, means different combinations of one or more of the listed items can be used, and only one of each item in the list may be needed. In other words, “at least one of” means any combination of items and number of items may be used from the list, but not all of the items in the list are required. The item can be a particular object, a thing, or a category.

For example, without limitation, “at least one of item A, item B, or item C” may include item A, item A and item B, or item B. This example also may include item A, item B, and item C or item B and item C. Of course, any combinations of these items can be present. In some illustrative examples, “at least one of” can be, for example, without limitation, two of item A; one of item B; and ten of item C; four of item B and seven of item C; or other suitable combinations.

With reference now to FIG. 2, news processing environment 200 includes components that can be implemented in hardware such as the hardware shown in network data processing system 100 in FIG. 1.

In this illustrative example, news recommendation system 202 operates to process and recommend news articles 204 based on subscriptions 206 of user 208 to different entities 210. Entities 210 are categorical descriptors with which news articles 204 may be associated. For example, entities 210 can be a company name, a geolocation, and a topic, as well as other relevant categorical descriptors with which news articles 204 may be associated.

In this illustrative example, news recommendation system 202 is located in computer system 212. Computer system 212 is a physical hardware system and includes one or more data processing systems. When more than one data processing system is present in computer system 212, those data processing systems are in communication with each other using a communications medium. The communications medium may be a network. The data processing systems may be selected from at least one of a computer, a server computer, a tablet, or some other suitable data processing system.

News recommendation system 202 can be implemented in software, hardware, firmware, or a combination thereof. When software is used, the operations performed by news recommendation system 202 can be implemented in program code configured to run on hardware, such as a processor unit. When firmware is used, the operations performed by news recommendation system 202 can be implemented in program code and data and stored in persistent memory to run on a processor unit. When hardware is employed, the hardware may include circuits that operate to perform the operations in news recommendation system 202.

In the illustrative examples, the hardware may take a form selected from at least one of a circuit system, an integrated circuit, an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a programmable logic device, or some other suitable type of hardware configured to perform a number of operations. With a programmable logic device, the device can be configured to perform the number of operations. The device can be reconfigured at a later time or can be permanently configured to perform the number of operations. Programmable logic devices include, for example, a programmable logic array, a programmable array logic, a field programmable logic array, a field programmable gate array, and other suitable hardware devices. Additionally, the processes can be implemented in organic components integrated with inorganic components and can be comprised entirely of organic components excluding a human being. For example, the processes can be implemented as circuits in organic semiconductors.

News recommendation system 202 includes a subscription-based pipeline 214 that recommends relevant ones of news articles 204 based on subscriptions 206 designated by user 208. Pipeline 214 can include a number of different components. As depicted, pipeline 214 includes ingestion 216, and subscriptions 206, as well as relevancy 219, and clustering and ranking 221 within artificial intelligence system 224.

During ingestion 216 of data, news recommendation system 202 integrates heterogeneous data streams 218 from a number of different news sources. Ingestion 216 provides an extract, transform, load (ETL) engine 220 that provides centralized data collection, processing, and enrichment of data from one or more of data streams 218. Data collected from the above sources is stored in database 223. In this illustrative example, database 223 can be a NoSQL database that uses cluster of nodes 222 for storage.

In one illustrative example, ingestion 216 parses and indexes data streams 218, as the dataset can be large, dynamic, and requires fast retrieval. In one illustrative example, ingestion 216 is implemented as an integrated service, such as Elastic Stack, which automatically detects and adds new fields when required.

News recommendation system 202 distributes news articles 204 into different ones of subscriptions 206. In one illustrative example, news articles 204 are distributed into different ones of subscriptions 206, providing a query context for the different entities 210.

Each one of entities 210 corresponds to a separate one of subscriptions 206 to which a user may subscribe. In one illustrative example, entities 210 can be designated by keywords, such as person names, organization names, place names, event names, and natural disasters, as well as other suitable keywords. All of news articles 204 talking about a particular entity, e.g. Fruit Co., Inc., are assigned into the corresponding one of subscriptions 206. News articles 204 may be relevant to one or more of entities 210. Thus, news articles 204 may be distributed to multiple ones of subscriptions 206. New business requirements can be met by creating new types of subscriptions and/or adding more subscriptions.

In this illustrative example, artificial intelligence system 224 can be used to recommend more news articles 204 as compared to known news recommendation systems.

An artificial intelligence system is a system that has intelligent behavior and can be based on the function of a human brain. An artificial intelligence system comprises at least one of an artificial neural network, an artificial neural network with natural language processing, a cognitive system, a Bayesian network, a fuzzy logic, an expert system, a natural language system, a cognitive system, or some other suitable system.

Machine learning is used to train the artificial intelligence system. Machine learning involves inputting data to the process and allowing the process to adjust and improve the function of the artificial intelligence system. In this illustrative example, training of artificial intelligence system 224 can be performed using a set of machine learning algorithms. The set of machine learning algorithms can be machine learning algorithms that are selected from at least one of supervised learning, unsupervised learning, reinforcement learning, or other suitable types of machine learning algorithms.

In this illustrative example, supervised learning comprises providing the artificial intelligence machine model with training data and the correct output value of the data. During supervised learning, the values for the output are provided along with the training data (labeled dataset) for the model building process. The algorithm, through trial and error, deciphers the patterns that exist between the input training data and the known output values to create an artificial intelligence model that can reproduce the same underlying rules with new data.

Examples of supervised learning algorithms include regression analysis, decision trees, k-nearest neighbors, neural networks, and support vector machines. Another example of a supervised learning algorithm that can be used to train artificial intelligence models is Named Entity Recognition (NER), Deep Neural Network Classification.

If unsupervised learning is used, not all of the variables and data patterns are labeled, forcing the artificial intelligence machine model to discover hidden patterns and create labels on its own through the use of unsupervised learning algorithms. Unsupervised learning has the advantage of discovering patterns in the data with no need for labeled datasets. Examples of algorithms used in unsupervised machine learning include k-means clustering, association analysis, and descending clustering.

Whereas supervised learning and unsupervised learning learn from a dataset, reinforcement learning learns from interactions with an environment. Algorithms such as Q-learning are used to train the predictive model through interacting with the environment using measurable performance criteria.

News recommendation system 202 uses artificial intelligence system 224 to determine relevancy 219. Relevancy 219 can include a de-duplication to remove duplicate news articles 204 in each subscription. Identifying duplicate news helps to remove noise, improve the cluster importance estimation, and speed up the whole pipeline. For example, some news sources copy and re-post news from an original source with little changes. Furthermore, a news source may produce updated versions of news with minor changes. De-duplication can reduce these duplicate news articles by detecting and only keeping the latest one.

It is common that, although an entity (e.g., a company or a city) is mentioned in a news article, it is not the focus of the article. Relevancy 219 can apply a news entity model to identify the relevance of an article to an associated entity and remove irrelevant news.

News published by larger news sources (i.e., publishers) tend to be more credible and accurate. More reputable news sources are more influential to the financial market and investors. Relevancy 219 can filter news by news sources in order to further refine the news candidate sets.

Often times, news events that can potentially impact credit rating activities are implicit and mostly determined by analysts' knowledge and interpretation of the events. Hence, relevancy 219 can apply a set of models to identify or score a news topic relevance for news articles 204 that could impact their analysis.

News recommendation system 202 uses artificial intelligence system 224 to determine clustering and ranking 221. As big news events may be reported by many news sources, the size of a news cluster can indicate the event noteworthiness, signaling the event importance. Furthermore, grouping news on the same events improves user browsing experience as analysts do not have to manually skip over similar news in the application.

In one illustrative example, clustering and ranking 221 rank both clusters and news in each cluster. Important clusters rank higher (i.e., cluster-level ranking), with each cluster showing the most representative news for each cluster (i.e., news-level ranking).

News recommendation system 202 stores output 226 of clustering and ranking 221 in database 223. In this illustrative example, database 223 can be a relational database, enabling news recommendation system 202 to maintain the atomicity of operations on database 202 and to comply with integrity requirements both in data type and compatibility for the services layer. The relational database stores the relationship between clusters, news stories, and user subscriptions to create data objects 228 for graphical user interface 230.

In one illustrative example, each cluster of news articles is represented as a different one of data objects 228 displayed in graphical user interface 230. Graphical user interface 230 displays data objects 228 according to the output of clustering and ranking 221, ensuring that important news events do not get buried in the interface. Important ranking clusters are displayed higher in graphical user interface 230 relative to lower ranking clusters (i.e., cluster-level ranking).

By default, each one of data objects 228 displays the representative news for the corresponding cluster. The representative news of a cluster is the top-ranked news in the cluster. Each one of data objects 228 is therefore displayed within graphical user interface 230 showing the most representative news for each cluster (i.e., news-level ranking) can be presented with graphical user interface 230 with titles, entity names, descriptions, and publication dates.

In one illustrative example, each one of data objects 228 is a control element within graphical user interface 230. As used herein, a control is a graphical and/or functional element that can be reused across graphical user interface (GUI) applications and which the user can select and activate to get additional information. A control, in a graphical user interface, is an object on the screen that can be manipulated by the user to perform some action. In this illustrative example, user 208 can interact with data objects 228 to unfold additional news articles in that cluster for display in graphical user interface 230.

User 208 interacts with news recommendation system 202 through user input to graphical user interface 230 using one or more user input devices, such as a keyboard, a mouse, a graphical user interface (a physical display), a touch screen, a voice interaction, and any other suitable interface for interacting with the computer.

In one illustrative example, a client device, such as one of client devices 110 of FIG. 1, displays graphical user interface 230 on display system 232. In this illustrative example, display system 232 can be a group of display devices. A display device in display system 232 may be selected from one of a liquid crystal display (LCD), a light emitting diode (LED) display, an organic light emitting diode (OLED) display, and other suitable types of display devices.

In one illustrative example, subscriptions 206 of user 208 are stored as portfolio 234 in conjunction with user profile 236. By default, user 208 receives news of subscriptions 206 in portfolio 234. When user 208 logs on, graphical user interface 230 will bring up and rank all news articles corresponding to subscriptions 206 in portfolio 234. News recommendation system 202 allows user 208 to create and follow additional subscriptions, enabling user 208 to have a variety of entities 210 indicated in portfolio 234, and thereby to follow different topics and companies based on subscriptions 206.

In one illustrative example, one or more technical solutions are present that overcome a technical problem with currently available news recommendation systems. As a result, one or more technical solutions may provide a technical effect of enabling an artificial intelligence system to recommend relevant news articles with greater accuracy as compared to current news recommendation systems.

Computer system 212 can be configured to perform at least one of the steps, operations, or actions described in the different illustrative examples using software, hardware, firmware, or a combination thereof. As a result, computer system 212 operates as a special purpose computer system in which pipeline 214 in computer system 212 enables artificial intelligence system 224 to process news articles 204. In particular, pipeline 214 transforms computer system 212 into a special purpose computer system as compared to currently available general computer systems that do not have pipeline 214.

In the illustrative example, the use of pipeline 214 in computer system 212 integrates processes into a practical application for a method of recommending news articles 204 that increases the performance of computer system 212. In other words, pipeline 214 in computer system 212 is directed towards a practical application of processes integrated into pipeline 214 in computer system 212 that identifies relevant news articles based on users' subscriptions to different entities.

In this illustrative example, pipeline 214 in computer system 212 utilizes one or more machine learning algorithms in a manner that results in an artificial intelligence system that is capable of processing news articles, and generating recommendations with a desired level of accuracy. In this manner, pipeline 214 in computer system 212 provides a practical application of a method to process news articles and generate recommendations such that the functioning of computer system 212 is improved.

FIG. 3 is an illustration of an architecture of a news recommendation system in which illustrative embodiments can be implemented. Architecture 300 is an exemplary architecture of news recommendation system 200, shown in FIG. 2.

The pipeline of architecture 300 can be provided as an offline process that is scheduled to run at designated intervals, such as daily, hourly, etc., from ingestion to news result generation. Due in part to parallel processing described herein, the system scales horizontally, taking about 15 minutes to process 1,500 subscriptions, and less than 45 minutes for nearly 5,000 subscriptions, wherein running on an Amazon AWS web server, news can be more timely updated as the pipeline is kicked off more frequently.

Architecture 300 includes ingestion layer 302, subscription layer 304, relevance layer 306, and clustering and ranking layer 308.

Ingestion layer 302 integrates heterogeneous data streams from multiple different news providers. Without loss of generality, the presented framework can integrate data from any data provider.

In one illustrative example, the different news providers can include news provider 310. In this illustrative example, news provider 310 is a third party company that provides a news management and delivery solution for publishing and financial services. Data from news provider 310 may be published in XML format, wherein each XML contains information on a news article, such as title, content, and source. In this illustrative example, news provider 310 may be Acquire Media Co., delivering about 60,000 daily news articles published by more than 10,000 global sources.

In one illustrative example, the different news providers can include news provider 312. In this illustrative example, news provider 312 is a publicly available news aggregator that uses its own algorithms to collect news related to different keywords. Each entity of interest is set up as keywords in news provider 312 as a feed. Ingestion layer 302 may include a crawler that is scheduled to download news from all feeds. In this illustrative example, news provider 310 may be Google News, developed by Alphabet Inc.

In one illustrative example, the different news providers can include news provider 314. In this illustrative example, news provider 314 is a third-party news provider that delivers curated news with an emphasis on analysis rather than reported news. The news distributed through news provider 314 focuses on offering insights to end users. In this illustrative example, news provider 314 may be S&P Market Intelligence (MI) News.

Data collected from the above sources is stored into NoSQL database 315 as a cluster of nodes for storage. The parsed data is directly inserted to Elasticsearch which automatically detects and adds new fields when required. Architecture 300 uses different compound queries to prepare the data, distributing the news articles into subscriptions.

Processes in each subscription are independent of each other. After news articles are distributed into subscriptions, all subsequent processes are conducted within each subscription.

In one illustrative example, the pipeline adopts multi-processing to process subscriptions simultaneously. Subscriptions are assigned and processed on different CPUs. Since subscriptions may have different numbers of news articles, load-balancing can be employed to guarantee that the CPUs get a balanced workload. The same parallelization design can be applied on Hadoop clusters due to the independence among subscriptions.

In one illustrative example, load-balancing is performed using a greedy algorithm. Algorithm 1 provides pseudocode for an illustrative subscription allocation algorithm that in a minimum heap that contains subscriptions allocated to each CPU:

Algorithm 1: Subscription Allocation Algorithm minimum Heap H ← Ø; j ← 0; while j < #CPUs do  | S′_(j) ← Ø // store allocated subscriptions;  | push(H, S′_(j), [0,j]) // 0 is #news m in jth CPU;  | j ← j + 1; end i ← 0; while i < n do  | m, S′_(j), j ← pop (H) //jth CPU with the least #news;  | push (H; [m + |s_(i)|, S′_(j)∪{s_(i)}, j]  | i ← i + 1; end Wherein:

-   -   Subscriptions S={s₁, s₂, . . . , s_(n)}; and |s_(i)| is denoted         as the number of news in s_(i).

Relevance layer 306 includes de-duplication 316. Because re-posted news may be modified slightly (e.g., adding the re-posting news source name), simply comparing if news articles are the same causes low recall. To enable near duplicate detection, de-duplication 316 implements a Support Vector Machine (SVM) fed by the Local Sensitive Hashing (LSH) scores. Given a pair of news, de-duplication 316 calculates the LSH signatures of their titles, descriptions, and contents. The Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios of the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair are computed based on the LSH signatures. These six distances are fed into a SVM model with binary labels that identify whether the pair is duplicate. The SVM is trained over a manually-labeled training data by learning the parameters for these six features. A cut-off threshold is learned based on a validation dataset. The final model is evaluated on a test data.

Relevance layer 306 includes news entity relevance 318. News entity relevance 318 uses a machine learning model to identify main entities. Features are derived from the title, description, and content of each article. Phrase matching is applied for name detection on the title. Natural language processing, such as spaCy6, is used for name detection on the description and content. The model leverages natural language processing to depict entity, noun, and subject recognition in text with standard sentence structure.

Since the title, description, and content of a news article have different purposes, news entity relevance 318 generates independent features respectively for each section. For example, for a title, independent features may identify whether a title starts with the entity name, whether an entity name shows up in a sequence of entity names, and the normalized value of the first location of an entity name.

For description and content, news entity relevance 318 is a normalized mention frequency of an entity name in the text. However, exact matching of the name of a subscription often leads to low recall and introduces noise in the feature, because an entity alias name is often mentioned in a news article instead of the full official name. To overcome this challenge, news entity relevance 318 leverages n-grams, counting the number of tokens that match with each n-gram of an entity name, and then weighting the counts exponentially.

As the false negative is more critical for the particular use-case, news entity relevance 318 puts more weight on the recall score. For example, analysts would not be affected too much by receiving some irrelevant news (i.e., a false positive) to their portfolio. However, missing some of the major events (i.e., a false negative), such as merger and acquisition happening in a company that the analysts are analyzing, can be critical, having a massive and potentially adverse impact on their analysis.

Table 1 is an evaluation result of two different machine learning models that news entity relevance 318 can use to identify main entities, namely logistic regression and distributed gradient boosting, such as XGBoost. The logistic regression model predicts recall score of all the news articles as 1, leading to the low precision score. The logistic regression underperforms when it cannot identify the entity name in the news article at all due to the use of an abbreviation or a pseudo-name.

TABLE 1 Evaluation of News Entity Relevance Logistic Regression XGBoost Recall 1.000 0.848 Precision 0.671 0.884 F1 0.803 0.866

Relevance layer 306 includes news source relevance 320. In one illustrative example, news source relevance 320 identifies the relevance of news sources by ranking websites in order of popularity. For example, an Alexa Rank can be used as a standard metric to measure and reveal how influential a website is relative to all other sites based on a combination of a site's estimated traffic and visitor engagement.

In one illustrative example, news source relevance 320 first builds a mapping from news sources to domains. News articles are grouped by news sources and domains are extracted from the URLs. All news domains can be kept in case the news articles published by a news source has multiple domains. The output of this step is a hash table where keys are news source names and values are the lists of possible candidate domains that are in descending order.

For each news source, news source relevance 320 sequentially looks up the list of domains in a database of website popularity by frequency until a match is made. News published by the bottom 25% ranked news sources and unranked news sources are filtered out. To ensure the system validity to the financial analysis process, news source relevance 320 can also utilize a white-list of news sources provided by analysts.

Relevance layer 306 includes news topic relevance 322. In one illustrative example, news topic relevance 322 employs one or more machine learning models to predict topic relevance. Aside from certain explicit events, most events that can potentially impact rating activities are implicit and mostly determined by analysts' knowledge and interpretation of the events. To provide training data to the machine learning models, analysts can choose to provide feedback for clusters, i.e., what degrees of relevancy a cluster has and why. News topic relevance 322 can employ a machine learning model to predict user relevance feedback.

Clustering and ranking layer 308 includes deep clustering 324. In one illustrative example, deep clustering 324 employs deep learning methods that considers all words in a document without explicitly figuring out keywords or named entities.

Traditional document clustering methods are mainly word/phrase-based or topic-based algorithms. However, the performance of keyword and named entity extraction is still unsatisfactory on open-domain documents.

In one illustrative example, and in contrast to traditional document clustering methods, deep clustering 324 adopts a two-phase clustering algorithm. Named entities are first extracted from each news article using a statistical model. Each article is represented by a one-hot vector built based on its named entities. The distances of pairwise news articles are computed based on cosine distance. Two news articles are grouped together if their distance is not more than a threshold. One representative news is selected for each cluster based on news publication date and news source significance. The initial set of clusters are then merged based on the representative news. A deep contextualized word representation model, such as ELMo, is used to compute lower dimensional representation for each representative news article. The model first learns contextualized word representation by pre-training a language model in an unsupervised way.

Unlike widely-used word embeddings, the illustrative embodiments represent words as functions of the entire input sentence, modeling both (1) complex characteristics of word use, such as syntax and semantics, and (2) how these uses vary across linguistic contexts (i.e., polysemy). These word representations are computed on top of multi-layer bidirectional language models (biLMs) with character convolutions, as a linear function of the internal network states. The output of the deep learning model is a vector that represents the semantic of a representative news article. Pairwise clusters whose representative news articles are close to each other are merged into one cluster.

Table 2 is an evaluation result of different machine learning models that deep clustering 324 can use to cluster different news representations. The two-phase clustering is compared with 1) a name entity-based (NER), in which spaCy natural language processing and one-hot encoding are used to extract and model named entities; and 2) a latent dirichlet allocation (LDA) based model, in which an LDA model is used to compute low dimensional news representation. The clustering is done on a labeled news collection of three days.

TABLE 2 Evaluation of Clustering NER LDA Two-Phase Adjusted Rand Score 0.0293 0.2843 0.3531 Adjusted MI Score 0.1126 0.2757 0.3452

The performance is evaluated by an adjusted rand score and adjusted mutual information score, two commonly-used metrics for clustering evaluation. The results show that the deep contextualized word representation model significantly outperforms the other models.

Referring now to FIG. 4, an illustration of a structure of a neural network model for computing a lower dimensional representation of data news article is depicted in accordance with an illustrative example. Neural network model 400 is an example of a deep contextualized word representation model that can be used by deep clustering 324 of FIG. 3.

At input layer 401, each token 410 is converted to an appropriate representation 412 using character embeddings. The representations are then run through a convolutional layer 414 using some number of filters, followed by a max-pool layer 416.

Representations 418 are passed through a 2-layer highway network before being provided as the input to the biLMs layer 420. Character convolutions are used to learn morphological features and form a valid representation for out-of-vocabulary words.

The biLMs learn embeddings for each word from different directions. To combine these embeddings into one, weighted average 422 is applied based on softmax normalization. To get a sentence representation, fixed mean-pooling 424 is applied over all contextualized word representations.

Referring again to FIG. 3, the news representations can be fed into a clustering algorithm, such as k-means and hierarchical clustering. In one illustrative example, deep clustering 324 clusters news representations according to a pseudo on-line clustering algorithm. Algorithm 2 provides pseudocode for clustering news received in a news cycle in chronological order by publication time.

Algorithm 2: Pseudo-online Clustering C ← C′ // store current clusters; for each d_(i) in D do  | if |C| > 0 then  | | compute the pairwise cosine similarities S for  | | d_(i) and thecentroid of each c_(j) in C;  | | if min (S) < λ then  | | | add d_(i) to the nearest cluster in D;  | | | continue;  | | end  | end  | create a singleton cluster for d_(i)and add to C; end Discard clusters that are not added any news within t; Wherein:

-   -   News received in the new cycle D={d₁, d₂, . . . , d_(n)};     -   Historical news clusters computed at the end of the previous         cycle C′={c₁′, c₂′, . . . , c_(m)′};     -   A maximum similarity threshold A; and     -   A time window t.

Generally, the news is sorted in chronological order, while also considering historical news clusters formed in the previous news cycle, i.e., t is set to one day. Each news event received in the current cycle is assigned to the nearest existing cluster. If the nearest cluster is not found or there is no existing cluster, a singleton cluster is initialized by the news. Incoming news is clustered iteratively in chronological order, mimicking the chronology in which they are received. Finally, the clusters that have not been updated within the news cycle are discarded.

Clustering and ranking layer 308 includes both news ranking 326 and cluster ranking 328. Clustering and ranking layer 308 ranks both clusters and news in each cluster, decreasing a probability that important news events get buried in the user interface.

In one illustrative example, news ranking 326 ranks news within each cluster by two factors sequentially: 1) publication date; and 2) news ranking score. Ranking by publication date ensures that analysts can see newly-added news in those historical clusters. Ranking by news ranking score prioritizes the most relevant news within each cluster. In one illustrative example, the news ranking score is the weighted sum of the entity relevance score and news source relevance, and the weight of the relevance score was set empirically based on analysts' feedback.

In one illustrative example, cluster ranking 328 ranks clusters by three factors sequentially: 1) update date; 2) clustering ranking score; and 3) cluster size. The updated date is a good indicator of the event recentness. Ranking by the update date ensures analysts do not miss new news events. A clustering ranking score is one indicator of event importance. In one illustrative example, the clustering ranking score is computed by taking the maximum news ranking score of all the news within the cluster and summing the weighted cluster size. Cluster size is another indicator of event importance. Important clusters tend to have large sizes because more news sources may cover the news events.

Referring now to FIG. 5, an illustration of a graphical user interface of a news recommendation system is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Graphical user interface 500 is an example of graphical user interface 230, shown in block form in FIG. 2.

Graphical user interface 500 includes data objects 510, 512, 514, and 516. By default, the representative news of all represented clusters are presented with titles 518, entity names 520, descriptions 522, and publication dates 524.

Each data object can include one or more control elements. On the right side, analysts can mark the whole cluster as read by clicking on check icon 526. Analysts can also provide feedback on the cluster relevancy by clicking on dialog icon 528. The relevance feedback provided through user interface 500 can be used to adjust a news topic relevance model, such as a model employed by topic relevance 322 of FIG. 3.

Data object 512 includes additional “View 3 More” control element 530. By clicking control element 530, analysts can unfold data object 512, and view the additional news articles in that cluster.

FIG. 6 is a flowchart illustrating a process for identifying and recommending relevant news articles depicted in accordance with illustrative embodiments. Process 600 can be implemented in one or more components of news recommendation system 202, shown in block form in FIG. 2.

Process 600 begins by ingesting a plurality of news articles (step 610). The news articles can be news articles 204 of FIG. 2, provided from a number of different data sources.

Process 600 parses news articles to identify a number of entities (step 620), and, based on the identified entities, assigns each article to a number of subscriptions (step 630).

Within each subscription, process 600 removes duplicate articles (step 640), and determines article relevancy (step 650). The article relevancy can include news entity relevance, news source relevance, and news topic relevance.

Process 600 then clusters the articles into data objects for presentation on a graphical user interface (step 660), with process 600 terminating thereafter. The clustering can include, for example, individual news ranking within each cluster, and cluster ranking across the number of clusters.

With reference now to FIG. 7, a flowchart illustrating a process for providing news recommendations is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 700 can be implemented in one or more components of news recommendation system 202, shown in block form in FIG. 2.

Process 700 begins by ingesting news articles from a plurality of news sources (step 710). The different news sources can be one or more news providers, such as news providers 310, 312, and 314 of FIG. 3.

Process 700 classifies the news articles into one or more subscriptions (step 720). The subscriptions can be, for example, subscriptions 206 of FIG. 2.

Within each subscription, process 700 removes duplicate news articles and irrelevant news articles (step 730). The removing is performed using an artificial intelligence system, such as artificial intelligence system 224 of FIG. 2.

Within each subscription, process 700 clusters the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters (step 740). The clustering is performed using the artificial intelligence system, such as artificial intelligence system 224 of FIG. 2.

Process 700 digitally presents the ranked clusters in a graphical user interface of a subscription-based news system interface for each subscription indicated in a portfolio of a user (step 750), with process 700 terminating thereafter.

With reference now to FIG. 8, a flowchart illustrating a process for ingesting news articles from a plurality of news sources is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 800 is one example of step 710, as shown in FIG. 7.

Process 800 begins by receiving news articles within a heterogeneous set of data streams from a plurality of news sources (step 810). Process 800 parses the data streams to identify one or more entities associated with each of the news articles (step 820).

Process 800 indexes the news articles according to the one or more entities identified therein (step 830). Process 800 stores each of the news articles as a cluster of nodes in a non-relational database (step 840). The process can then continue to step 720, as shown in FIG. 7.

With reference now to FIG. 9, a flowchart illustrating a process for classifying news articles into one or more subscriptions is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 900 is one example of step 720, as shown in FIG. 7.

Process 900 allocates news articles to one or more subscriptions according to the one or more entities identified by parsing data streams (step 910). Process 900 can then continue to step 730, as shown in FIG. 7.

With reference now to FIG. 10, a flowchart illustrating a process for removing duplicate news articles is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1000 is one example of step 730, as shown in FIG. 7.

Process 1000 determines local sensitive hashing (LSH) signatures of titles, descriptions, and contents for a pair of news articles within a subscription (step 1010).

Process 1000 determines Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair based on the LSH signatures (step 1020).

Process 1000 determines whether the pair of news articles is a duplicate based on a support vector machine model of the Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair (step 1030).

Responsive to determining that the pair of news articles is a duplicate, process 1000 removes the news article that has an earlier publication date (step 1040). Process 1000 can then continue to step 740 as shown in FIG. 7.

With reference now to FIG. 11, a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1100 is one example of step 740, as shown in FIG. 7.

Process 1100 removes irrelevant news based on a relevance of an article to the one or more entities identified in the article (step 1110). Process 1100 removes irrelevant news based on a popularity of the news source of the article (step 1120).

The process removes irrelevant news based on a relevance of a topic of an article to the user (step 1130). The process can then continue to step 750, as shown in FIG. 7.

With reference now to FIG. 12, a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles based on entity relevance is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1200 is one example of a process step 1110, as shown in FIG. 11.

Process 1200 identifies main entities in each article using a machine learning model that independently derives features from the title, description, and content of each article (step 1210).

In this illustrative example, identifying the main entries includes phrase matching of the title to identify a main entity (step 1220). In an illustrative embodiment, phrase matching can include analyzing a grammatic structure of the phrase. For example, analyzing the grammatic structure may include identifying a contextual location of an entity name within the phrase, such as a beginning, middle, and end. Analyzing the grammatic structure can include identifying a part-of-speech or part-of-sentence of the entity name, such as whether the entity name is the proper noun, subject, direct object, indirect object, etc. of the phrase.

In this illustrative example, process 1200 identifies the main entries including natural language processing of the description and content to identify the main entity (step 1230). The natural language processing can include n-gram modeling that counts a number of tokens that match with each n-gram of an entity name, and then weighs the counts exponentially. Process 1200 can then continue to process step 1120 as shown in FIG. 11.

With reference now to FIG. 13, a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles based on a news source is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1300 is one example of step 1120, as shown in FIG. 11.

Process 1300 builds a mapping from news sources to domains (step 1310). Building the mapping includes grouping news articles by news sources (step 1320). Process 1300 builds the mapping including extracting domains from the URLs of news articles (step 1330).

For each news source, process 1300 sequentially looks up the domains in a database of website popularity by frequency until a match is made (step 1340).

Process 1300 removes the news articles published by the news sources that rank below a popularity threshold in the database of website popularity (step 1350). Process 1300 can then continue to step 1130, as shown in FIG. 11.

With reference now to FIG. 14, a flowchart illustrating a process for removing irrelevant news articles based on topic relevance is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1400 is one example of step 1130, as shown in FIG. 11.

Process 1400 predicts topic relevance for the user using a machine learning model trained on feedback regarding a cluster provided from the user (step 1410). Process 1400 can then continue to step 750, as shown in FIG. 7.

With reference now to FIG. 15, a flowchart illustrating a process for clustering news articles according to content is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1500 is one example of step 750, as shown in block form in FIG. 7.

Process 1500 determines a lower dimensional representation for each news article using a deep contextualized word representation model (step 1510).

Process 1500 clusters the lower dimensional representations of the news articles using a clustering algorithm (step 1520), with process 1500 terminating thereafter.

With reference now to FIG. 16, a flowchart illustrating a process for iteratively clustering news articles in chronological order is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1600 can be implemented in conjunction with step 750, as shown in FIG. 7.

Within a current cycle, process 1600 attempts to identify a nearest existing cluster for each news article received (step 1610).

If the nearest cluster is found (“yes” at step 1610), process 1600 assigns each news article received to the nearest existing cluster (step 1620).

If the nearest cluster is not found (“no” at step 1610), process 1600 initializes a singleton cluster for the news article (step 1630).

Process 1600 discards clusters that have not been updated within a number of news cycles (step 1640), with process 1600 terminating thereafter.

With reference now to FIG. 17, a flowchart illustrating a process for clustering news articles according to content is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1700 can be implemented in conjunction with step 750, as shown in FIG. 7.

Process 1700 ranks news within each cluster sequentially by publication date (step 1710). Within each sequentially ranked publication date, process 1700 ranks each cluster sequentially by news ranking score (step 1720), with process 1700 terminating thereafter.

With reference now to FIG. 18, a flowchart illustrating a process for clustering news articles according to content is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Process 1800 can be implemented in conjunction with step 750, as shown in FIG. 7.

Process 1800 ranks clusters sequentially by date (step 1810). The date can be, for example, a cluster-creation date, or a cluster-update date. Within each sequentially ranked date, process 1800 ranks clusters sequentially by clustering ranking score (step 1820). Within each sequentially ranked clustering ranking score, process 1800 ranks clusters sequentially by cluster size (step 1830), with process 1800 terminating thereafter.

The flowcharts and block diagrams in the different depicted embodiments illustrate the architecture, functionality, and operation of some possible implementations of apparatuses and methods in an illustrative embodiment. In this regard, each block in the flowcharts or block diagrams may represent at least one of a module, a segment, a function, or a portion of an operation or step. For example, one or more of the blocks may be implemented as program code.

In some alternative implementations of an illustrative embodiment, the function or functions noted in the blocks may occur out of the order noted in the figures. For example, in some cases, two blocks shown in succession may be performed substantially concurrently, or the blocks may sometimes be performed in the reverse order, depending upon the functionality involved. Also, other blocks may be added in addition to the illustrated blocks in a flowchart or block diagram.

Turning now to FIG. 19, an illustration of a block diagram of a data processing system is depicted in accordance with an illustrative embodiment. Data processing system 1900 may be used to implement one or more computers and client computer system 110 in FIG. 1. In this illustrative example, data processing system 1900 includes communications framework 1902, which provides communications between processor unit 1904, memory 1906, persistent storage 1908, communications unit 1910, input/output unit 1912, and display 1914. In this example, communications framework 1902 may take the form of a bus system.

Processor unit 1904 serves to execute instructions for software that may be loaded into memory 1906. Processor unit 1904 may be a number of processors, a multi-processor core, or some other type of processor, depending on the particular implementation. In an embodiment, processor unit 1904 comprises one or more conventional general-purpose central processing units (CPUs). In an alternate embodiment, processor unit 1904 comprises one or more graphical processing units (CPUs).

Memory 1906 and persistent storage 1908 are examples of storage devices 1916. A storage device is any piece of hardware that is capable of storing information, such as, for example, without limitation, at least one of data, program code in functional form, or other suitable information either on a temporary basis, a permanent basis, or both on a temporary basis and a permanent basis. Storage devices 1916 may also be referred to as computer-readable storage devices in these illustrative examples. Memory 1916, in these examples, may be, for example, a random access memory or any other suitable volatile or non-volatile storage device. Persistent storage 1908 may take various forms, depending on the particular implementation.

For example, persistent storage 1908 may contain one or more components or devices. For example, persistent storage 1908 may be a hard drive, a flash memory, a rewritable optical disk, a rewritable magnetic tape, or some combination of the above. The media used by persistent storage 1908 also may be removable. For example, a removable hard drive may be used for persistent storage 1908. Communications unit 1910, in these illustrative examples, provides for communications with other data processing systems or devices. In these illustrative examples, communications unit 1910 is a network interface card.

Input/output unit 1912 allows for input and output of data with other devices that may be connected to data processing system 1900. For example, input/output unit 1912 may provide a connection for user input through at least one of a keyboard, a mouse, or some other suitable input device. Further, input/output unit 1912 may send output to a printer. Display 1914 provides a mechanism to display information to a user.

Instructions for at least one of the operating system, applications, or programs may be located in storage devices 1916, which are in communication with processor unit 1904 through communications framework 1902. The processes of the different embodiments may be performed by processor unit 1904 using computer-implemented instructions, which may be located in a memory, such as memory 1906.

These instructions are referred to as program code, computer-usable program code, or computer-readable program code that may be read and executed by a processor in processor unit 1904. The program code in the different embodiments may be embodied on different physical or computer-readable storage media, such as memory 1906 or persistent storage 1908.

Program code 1918 is located in a functional form on computer-readable media 1920 that is selectively removable and may be loaded onto or transferred to data processing system 1900 for execution by processor unit 1904. Program code 1918 and computer-readable media 1920 form computer program product 1922 in these illustrative examples. In one example, computer-readable media 1920 may be computer-readable storage media 1924 or computer-readable signal media 1926.

In these illustrative examples, computer-readable storage media 1924 is a physical or tangible storage device used to store program code 1918 rather than a medium that propagates or transmits program code 1918. Alternatively, program code 1918 may be transferred to data processing system 1900 using computer-readable signal media 1926.

Computer-readable signal media 1926 may be, for example, a propagated data signal containing program code 1918. For example, computer-readable signal media 1926 may be at least one of an electromagnetic signal, an optical signal, or any other suitable type of signal. These signals may be transmitted over at least one of communications links, such as wireless communications links, optical fiber cable, coaxial cable, a wire, or any other suitable type of communications link.

The different components illustrated for data processing system 1900 are not meant to provide architectural limitations to the manner in which different embodiments may be implemented. The different illustrative embodiments may be implemented in a data processing system including components in addition to or in place of those illustrated for data processing system 1900. Other components shown in FIG. 19 can be varied from the illustrative examples shown. The different embodiments may be implemented using any hardware device or system capable of running program code 1918.

The news recommendation system described herein offers several advantages that allow financial analysts to work more effectively and efficiently. The news recommendation system described herein presents a full stack financial news recommendation system from data storage to a graphical user interface that can be easily deployed at any financial company. With a subscription-based pipeline, the system can be conveniently parallelized and extended for new business monitoring requirements. By using a series of clustering and relevancy models, the system is able to recommend news events that have a direct relevancy to the final outcome of analysis, e.g., credit rating, at a financial firm.

The description of the different illustrative embodiments has been presented for purposes of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the embodiments in the form disclosed. The different illustrative examples describe components that perform actions or operations. In an illustrative embodiment, a component may be configured to perform the action or operation described. For example, the component may have a configuration or design for a structure that provides the component an ability to perform the action or operation that is described in the illustrative examples as being performed by the component. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.

Further, different illustrative embodiments may provide different features as compared to other desirable embodiments. The embodiment or embodiments selected are chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the embodiments, the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the disclosure for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A computer-implemented method for providing news recommendations, the method comprising: ingesting news articles from a plurality of news sources; classifying the news articles into one or more subscriptions; within each subscription, removing duplicate news articles and topic false positive news articles, wherein the removal is performed using an artificial intelligence system; within each subscription, clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, wherein the clustering is performed using the artificial intelligence system; and digitally presenting the ranked clusters in a graphical user of a subscription-based news system interface for each subscription indicated in a portfolio of a user, wherein removing duplicate news articles further comprises: determining local sensitive hashing (LSH) signatures of titles, descriptions, and contents for a pair of news articles within the subscription; determining Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair based on the LSH signatures; determining whether the pair of news articles is a duplicate based on a support vector machine model of the Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair; and responsive to determining that the pair of news articles is a duplicate, removing the news article that has an earlier publication date.
 2. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein ingesting the news articles from the plurality of news sources further comprises: receiving the news articles within a heterogeneous set of data streams from the plurality of news sources; parsing the data streams to identify one or more entities associated with each of the news articles; indexing the news articles according to the one or more entities identified therein; and storing each of the news articles as a cluster of nodes in a non-relational database.
 3. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein classifying the news articles into one or more subscriptions further comprises: allocating the news articles to one or more subscriptions according to one or more entities identified by parsing data streams.
 4. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein removing topic false positive news articles further comprises: removing topic false positive news based on a relevance of an article to one or more entities identified in the article; removing topic false positive news based on a popularity of the news source of the article; and removing topic false positive news based on a relevance of a topic of an article to the user.
 5. The computer-implemented method of claim 4, wherein removing topic false positive news based on the relevance of the article to the one or more entities identified in the article further comprises: identifying main entities in each article using a machine learning model that independently derives features from the title, description, and content of each article, wherein identifying the main entries include: phrase matching of the title to identify a main entity; and natural language processing of the description and content to identify the main entity, including n-gram modeling that counts a number of tokens that match with each n-gram of an entity name, and then weighs the counts exponentially.
 6. The computer-implemented method of claim 4, wherein removing topic false positive news based on the popularity of the news source of the article further comprises: building a mapping from news sources to domains, including grouping news articles by news sources and extracting domains from URLs of news articles; for each news source, sequentially looking up the domains in a database of website popularity by frequency until a match is made; and removing news articles published by news sources that rank below a popularity threshold in the database of website popularity.
 7. The computer-implemented method of claim 4, wherein removing topic false positive news based on the relevance of the topic of the article to the user further comprises: predicting topic relevance for the user using a machine learning model trained on feedback regarding a cluster provided from the user.
 8. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: determining a lower dimensional representation for each news article using a deep contextualized word representation model; and clustering the lower dimensional representations of the news articles using a clustering algorithm.
 9. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein incoming news is clustered iteratively in chronological order, wherein clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: within a current cycle, assigning each news article received to the nearest existing cluster; if the nearest cluster is not found, initializing a singleton cluster for the news article; and discarding clusters that have not been updated within a number of news cycles.
 10. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: ranking news within each cluster sequentially by publication date and news ranking score.
 11. The computer-implemented method of claim 1, wherein clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: ranking clusters sequentially by date, clustering ranking score, and cluster size.
 12. A subscription-based news system, the system comprising: a bus system; a storage device connected to the bus system, wherein the storage device stores program instructions; and a number of processors connected to the bus system, wherein the number of processors execute the program instructions: to ingest news articles from a plurality of news sources; to classify the news articles into one or more subscriptions; within each subscription, to remove duplicate news articles and topic false positive news articles, wherein the removing is performed using an artificial intelligence system; within each subscription, to cluster the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, wherein the clustering is performed using an artificial intelligence system; and to present digitally the ranked clusters in a graphical user of a subscription-based news system interface for each subscription indicated in a portfolio of a user, wherein in removing duplicate news articles, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to determine local sensitive hashing (LSH) signatures of titles, descriptions, and contents for a pair of news articles within the subscription; to determine Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair based on the LSH signatures; to determine whether the pair of news articles is a duplicate based on a support vector machine model of the Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair; and responsive to determining that the pair of news articles is a duplicate, to remove the news article that has an earlier publication date.
 13. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein in ingesting the news articles from the plurality of news sources, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to receive the news articles within a heterogeneous set of data streams from the plurality of news sources; to parse the data streams to identify one or more entities associated with each of the news articles; to index the news articles according to the one or more entities identified therein; and to store each of the news articles as a cluster of nodes in a non-relational database.
 14. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein in classifying the news articles into one or more subscriptions, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to allocate the news articles to one or more subscriptions according to one or more entities identified by parsing data streams.
 15. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein in removing topic false positive news articles, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to remove topic false positive news based on a relevance of an article to one or more entities identified in the article; to remove topic false positive news based on a popularity of the news source of the article; and to remove topic false positive news based on a relevance of a topic of an article to the user.
 16. The subscription-based news system of claim 15, wherein in removing topic false positive news based on the relevance of the article to the one or more entities identified in the article, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to identify main entities in each article using a machine learning model that independently derives features from the title, description, and content of each article, wherein identifying the main entries includes: phrase matching of the title to identify a main entity; and natural language processing of the description and content to identify the main entity, including n-gram modeling that counts a number of tokens that match with each n-gram of an entity name, and then weighs the counts exponentially.
 17. The subscription-based news system of claim 15, wherein in removing topic false positive news based on the popularity of the news source of the article, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to build a mapping from news sources to domains, including grouping News articles by news sources and extracting domains from URLs of news articles; for each news source, sequentially to look up the domains in a database of website popularity by frequency until a match is made; and to remove news articles published by news sources that rank below a popularity threshold in the database of website popularity.
 18. The subscription-based news system of claim 15, wherein in removing topic false positive news based on the relevance of the topic of the article to the user, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to predict topic relevance for the user using a machine learning model trained on feedback regarding a cluster provided from the user.
 19. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein in clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to determine a lower dimensional representation for each news article using a deep contextualized word representation model; and to cluster the lower dimensional representations of the news articles using a clustering algorithm.
 20. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein incoming news is clustered iteratively in chronological order, wherein in clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: within a current cycle, to assign each news article received to the nearest existing cluster; if the nearest cluster is not found, to initialize a singleton cluster for the news article; and to discard clusters that have not been updated within a number of news cycles.
 21. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein in clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to rank news within each cluster sequentially by publication date and news ranking score.
 22. The subscription-based news system of claim 12, wherein in clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, the number of processors further execute the program instructions: to rank clusters sequentially by update date, clustering ranking score, and cluster size.
 23. A computer program product for providing news recommendations, the computer program product comprising: a non-volatile computer readable storage medium having program code embodied therewith, the program code, including: program code for ingesting news articles from a plurality of news sources; program code for classifying the news articles into one or more subscriptions; program code for removing duplicate news articles and topic false positive news articles within each subscription, wherein the removing is performed using an artificial intelligence system; program code for clustering the news articles within each subscription according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters, wherein the clustering is performed using the artificial intelligence system; and program code for digitally presenting the ranked clusters in a graphical user of a subscription-based news system interface for each subscription indicated in a portfolio of a user, wherein the program code for removing duplicate news articles further comprises: program code for determining local sensitive hashing (LSH) signatures of titles, descriptions, and contents for a pair of news articles within the subscription; program code for determining Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair based on the LSH signatures; program code for determining whether the pair of news articles is a duplicate based on a support vector machine model of the Levenshtein distances and token sort ratios for the title pair, the description pair, and the content pair; and program code for removing the news article that has an earlier publication date in response to determining that the pair of news articles is a duplicate.
 24. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for ingesting the news articles from the plurality of news sources further comprises: program code for receiving the news articles within a heterogeneous set of data streams from the plurality of news sources; program code for parsing the data streams to identify one or more entities associated with each of the news articles; program code for indexing the news articles according to the one or more entities identified therein; and program code for storing each of the news articles as a cluster of nodes in a non-relational database.
 25. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for classifying the news articles into one or more subscriptions further comprises: program code for allocating the news articles to one or more subscriptions according to one or more entities identified by parsing data streams.
 26. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for removing topic false positive news articles further comprises: program code for removing topic false positive news based on a relevance of an article to one or more entities identified in the article; program code for removing topic false positive news based on a popularity of the news source of the article; and program code for removing topic false positive news based on a relevance of a topic of an article to the user.
 27. The computer program product of claim 26, wherein the program code for removing topic false positive news based on the relevance of the article to the one or more entities identified in the article further comprises: program code for identifying main entities in each article using a machine learning model that independently derives features from the title, description, and content of each article, wherein identifying the main entries includes: phrase matching of the title to identify a main entity; and natural language processing of the description and content to identify the main entity, including n-gram modeling that counts a number of tokens that match with each n-grams of an entity name, and then weighs the counts exponentially.
 28. The computer program product of claim 26, wherein the program code for removing topic false positive news based on the popularity of the news source of the article further comprises: program code for building a mapping from news sources to domains, including grouping news articles by news sources and extracting domains from URLs of news articles; program code, For each news source, for sequentially looking up the domains in a database of website popularity by frequency until a match is made; and program code for removing news articles published by news sources that rank below a popularity threshold in the database of website popularity.
 29. The computer program product of claim 26, wherein the program code for removing topic false positive news based on the relevance of the topic of the article to the user further comprises: program code for predicting topic relevance for the user using a machine learning model trained on feedback regarding a cluster provided from the user.
 30. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: program code for determining a lower dimensional representation for each news article using a deep contextualized word representation model; program code for clustering the lower dimensional representations of the news articles using a clustering algorithm.
 31. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for incoming news is clustered iteratively in chronological order, wherein clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: program code for assigning each news article received within a current cycle to the nearest existing cluster; program code for initializing a singleton cluster for the news article If the nearest cluster is not found; and program code for discarding clusters that have not been updated within a number of news cycles.
 32. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: program code for ranking news within each cluster sequentially by publication date and News ranking score.
 33. The computer program product of claim 23, wherein the program code for clustering the news articles according to content of the news articles to form a set of ranked clusters further comprises: program code for ranking clusters sequentially by update date, clustering ranking score, and cluster size. 